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The Magic Of Ordinary Days Part 7

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Later, I drove us away into wisps of dust that never got a chance to settle back to the ground during harvest days. Dirt and grime layered the air and coated the buildings, equipment, and vehicles. Even the trains became smoky phantoms emerging out of the earth, instead of riding the ground above it. The sky-blue engines called the Blue Gooses were as grimy brown as the solid black steam engines of other trains.

That evening, I carried the maternity dress into my room, folded it, and smoothed it out flat inside one of my drawers. Eventually, I realized, I'd be wearing it. After all, my old coverings weren't going to suffice forever.

The next day, Ray and I drove to church in the evening for a "social," as he put it. I wore the plainest dress I'd brought with me and kept my hair down. Inside the church kitchen, I found women sitting at the table, pooling and trading ration coupons. I realized too late I should've brought my coupons along. Ray raised enough chicken and pork to feed us, so I could have traded our meat coupons for more canned goods, or even for nylons.

Another group of women was trading off vegetables. I started to pull up a chair to listen and watch, but then I heard some of the conversation going on. One woman sitting next to Mrs. Pratt was complaining about women leaving their children at home, working in factories, and simply by their presence wooing married men, and of course wearing slacks. I ended up joining the women who were ripping up worn sheets and rolling them into bandages for the injured. We also filled paper bags with shaving goods, packs of cigarettes, and chocolate bars for men in hospitals. Here the conversation was more bearable. A woman was telling us all about her son, a bombardier with the Fifth Air Force, who was back from combat attending B-29 school. She told us that his uniforms were custom-made in Australia and they were cream-colored, the loveliest she'd ever seen. And apparently the Electrolux man was in town. He had come out to one woman's house and had done all her floors while she was out doing her shopping, just to thank her for buying one.

They discussed making b.u.t.ter and cheese, canning preserves, and making sausage, conversations I couldn't even comment on. Soon I went to the window and looked outside to see what the men were doing. Hood up, some farmer's old car was the center of attention. Leaning in, the men pa.s.sed tools around and worked together.



Mrs. Pratt came up to stand behind me. "They're fixing the fluid drive on our old Chrysler, but we won't tell the factory." She pointed outside. "They have to take the drum apart, put in new seals, and get us driving again."

I watched Ray in the midst of the group leaning over the engine. "Is it dangerous?"

"I doubt it. The factory says you're not supposed to do it, but we have to figure out our own ways, nowadays." She smiled at me. "Don't worry. He's going to be all right."

I looked back outside. Children were running around the church building and the broken-down car, engaged in fantasy and games, and I wished I could join them.

That night, long after the interns had boarded the trucks and returned to their camp, I went walking on the farm. I left the narrow roadway and walked out into an open cleared field for the first time. Out in the middle, I looked over the remains of tangled bean vines, overturned stones, clods of dirt, and occasional pieces of trash and leaves blown in by the wind. And stamped down into the soil, I saw hundreds of small shoe prints, many of them as small as children's, footprints that could only belong to the j.a.panese interns.

Once we had talked of shoes. Arriving from the mild climate of Long Beach, Rose and Lorelei had brought with them only sneakers and sandals. Many of the Issei had come to camp with just their j.a.panese slippers. Rose found it a good excuse to buy boots she'd always wanted, but Lorelei complained about the cold winters. Never before had she felt such cold toes. I recalled an article that had once been published in Reader's Digest ent.i.tled "One Small Unwilling Captain." A j.a.panese man, in a letter to an American friend, had written, "I am a small man. I am an unwilling man. I am a captain in the j.a.panese Imperial Army, and I do not want to do this."

Regardless of the view taken and despite the thousands of conflicts I'd once studied in cla.s.ses, war's effect on the innocent had never come to me so strongly as it did at that moment. It came in the remembrance of that letter and in those footprints pressed down into Singleton soil. As I walked back to the cl.u.s.ter of house and outbuildings, I couldn't shake the vision of those prints. The wind blew in grit that coated my lips and peppered my eyes. Up ahead, I could see that Ray was home but still out working, piling up trash behind the barn. I stopped and watched from a distance.

As I stood there, a chill swept over me. In one instant, I knew what he had done.

I began to run. A pitiful sound came out of me-wail or cry, growl or moan-I didn't know what it was. I didn't even know I was capable of making such a beastly sound, but it came out of me without my will as I tore down the embankment to the barn. At the brink of the pile, I stopped and raked my hair with claw fingers. The trash heap now appeared as nothing but a ma.s.s of splintered wood pieces mixed with animal offal and bits of soggy newspaper. Pressure was building in my face.

"What is it?" Ray yelled as he jumped down from the tractor.

"My things. All the things I was collecting. The old tools, the antiques. I was collecting them in that burlap bag." Now I glared at him. "Did you take it?"

I turned and walked back to the house without waiting for an answer, because I knew it already. Except for Rose and Lorelei, the only things I cared about in this dreadful place were now gone. My few sources of pleasure, and he had gone and destroyed them.

In the house, I cooked dinner, but I kept having a hard time focusing on the pages of my cookbook. Instead, the words kept blurring on the page, and I kept banging pans together as I moved them around. Even my arms were angry. The veins stood up on top of the skin in tightly pulled ropes.

Nightfall came and still no sign of Ray.

At last, later than he'd ever returned before, he clumped up the steps to the house. He came in and stood before me with muddy water dripping down his face and pieces of smelly debris clinging to his clothes. His arms hung at both sides, and in one fist he held the burlap bag, which he set down on the floor.

"It was in the pile but near the bottom. It's still okay." At that moment, I saw more expression on his face than I'd seen in all the previous weeks we had spent together. What was his expression? Pain? Exasperation? Defeat? Disbelief?

He was struggling for speech. Then his words came out in a desperate plea. "You should have told me you loved them."

That night we ate in silence. I had tried to bake pork chops but had cooked them too long, making them tough. Cutting into those chops was like cutting into cardboard, and chewing the meat made my teeth hurt.

Ray ate it anyway, then he sat back. "This here's a working farm, Liwy. Everything we keep around here ought to have some use. I was just cleaning things out a bit, and when I saw an old sack, I thought it'd be trash."

I wouldn't look up. "It's not trash. Besides, that stuff looked as if it had been in the same shed for years. Why did you need to clean it out now?"

"I have some used equipment coming in and no place to put it up for winter."

Now I tried eating again. "Well, it was an accident."

He was still just sitting. "How much of that old stuff do you want to keep?"

I stared blankly ahead. I honestly didn't know.

For a long stretch of minutes, we continued to sit without moving. The air in between us grew as thick as the low fog that rises out of a night plain. I could feel it pressing in on my skin, wrapping me up. When it started to push down on my chest, too, finally I made myself look over at him. I saw his eyes barely well up, the tears men seldom cry just held back in check.

He said, "I'd do anything to make you happy."

I breathed out then. "I know."

Thirteen.

The next Sunday, we left church shortly after the service ended. Ray drove us away in silence, not once glancing over at me as he usually did. After pa.s.sing through the town, he pulled to a stop in front of a graveyard run over with grama gra.s.s, then he got out and walked inside the rusty iron gate without me. I didn't know if I was supposed to follow him or leave him alone, so for a few minutes I lingered in the car until I couldn't sit still any longer.

I found him standing over a grave, hat off and held in both hands, staring at the headstone of his brother, Daniel Singleton, born 1919, died 1941. Ray stood in the same way without moving for what was at least a half hour, and all I could guess was that in this way, he grieved. Only once did his eyes mist over, only once did he barely pa.s.s beyond the emotional boundaries of men, so self-imposed.

He grieved for his brother and I for my mother. We both suffered from the loss of someone we loved. Wasn't this a common thread so strong it should pull us together? I should've tried to comfort him, to console him for the pain of losing one so young as Daniel, his only brother. I should do something, I kept saying to myself. As I stood there, I tried to summon up affectionate feelings for him, but the only good memories I could recall were of the afternoon out on the fis.h.i.+ng pond. And on the same day, he had rescued me from Mrs. Pratt, had even told a lie for me, something I imagined he rarely did. He had done it to protect me, and I would protect him from this awful sorrow if only I could. But unfortunately, I knew the truth from my own experience. Nothing could pull a person out from under this load.

I stood beside him until the sun started to singe the tiny hairs that grew almost invisibly on my forearms. Finally Ray turned and walked back to the truck. He slumped into the seat and gripped the steering wheel, still staring straight ahead at nothing but empty air.

We drove back to the farm in silence. I spent the rest of the day reading, while Ray disappeared inside the barn. In the evening, he came indoors to hear Walter Winch.e.l.l on the radio, but we didn't talk over any of the news or the day's events. And for once, I retired to bed earlier than he did.

As the onion and bean harvest was finis.h.i.+ng up, the interns spent long days on the Singleton farm. With Rose and Lorelei nearby, we met every day for their midday break and for other s.n.a.t.c.hes of time when they could escape away from their overseer.

One day, on the front porch steps, Rose kept looking me over. "Are you well?" she asked me.

"I'm fine, just fine," I told her. I touched the strands of hair that lay out over my shoulders. I hadn't bothered cutting or curling my hair lately. Maybe I needed a trip to the beauty shop for a trim.

They glanced at each other. Then Lorelei peered into my face. "Are you certain?"

"Yes, of course." I was having trouble meeting her gaze. I looked down at my sneakers and saw that I had forgotten to tie the laces. "Why wouldn't I be?"

"You don't look well," said Lorelei.

"In what way?"

They didn't answer. Instead, Rose said to me, "There's a very old woman in the camp, an Issei who used to help women in your condition back in the old country. She can tell you what to do."

I shook my head. Maybe it was the extra weight. "Nothing's wrong."

Lorelei said, "She can make you feel better. And she can predict boy or girl."

Again, I shook my head. "Not yet."

That evening, Ray took me out into the elm grove. Those vase-shaped trees had lately changed to their autumn color, making a mesh of floating gold above us. Under our feet, leaves already fallen cus.h.i.+oned the ground as we walked into the shade.

"It's going to be a good harvest." Ray reached down and picked up a stem fingered out with yellow leaves. He handed it to me. "When the war's over, the price regulations will be lifted. All the farmers I know are thinking that, come soon, we'll be able to get good money for our crops."

I rolled the stem around in my hand, then pa.s.sed it back to him. As I caught his eye, he had to look away. Whenever I looked into the heart of his eyes now, he did this. He couldn't hold my gaze. And in the brief second I got a glimpse of his eyes, I saw what lay there-that same look of reservation, of hesitation, of sadness and vulnerability he didn't want to reveal, but which I saw almost every day now.

"This harvest is still one of the best we've ever had in these parts."

"You're a good farmer, Ray."

"This is good land. Never let us down. Not once, since I was a boy."

I looked out to the horizon that always sat at eye level. "Lucky for the world."

"Lucky for us, too." He readjusted the hat on his head. "This year'll pull in more money than ever before. We could add onto the house if you like."

Now I looked back in that direction. "The house is fine."

"I could add on a room for all those antiques of yours." He s.h.i.+fted his weight from one foot and then to the other. "Or I could put in a nursery."

"Please, no. Everything is fine the way it is. Your house," I said, turning in that direction.

"Our house."

"It's perfectly fine. And it's probably full of memories of your family just as it sits now." Already I could feel the weight of the burden I carried. "We don't need to change a thing."

The following Sunday, when I tried to b.u.t.ton the same dress I'd worn just a week earlier to church, I noticed that it was tighter around the waist and through the hips. I tested it by sitting on the edge of the bed and saw that when I sat down, the dress spread open between b.u.t.tons, revealing my pale and stretching skin. Quickly I tore it off and pulled out the dress that Rose and Lorelei had made for me. I had kept it folded in the drawer, not yet wanting to realize the inevitable. This morning, however, the time had come. I slipped the smocklike, loose dress over my neck and studied myself in the mirror.

People always say that pregnant women are beautiful, and as I've reached into old age, I find that I mostly agree. But back in those days, I could see no beauty in my newfound weight about the middle or in the watery pockets about the eyes. And again, as I looked at myself in the shapeless dress of a mother-to-be, it all came sweeping in over me. I had not antic.i.p.ated any of it, that nature would surpa.s.s my will, that I would find myself in such a state of circ.u.mstances, that I would be feeling the war in such a new way through Rose and Lorelei, and least of all that Ray would fall in love.

When I walked out into the main room with my purse in hand, Ray stood up. He looked me over briefly, but said nothing about my new look, only, "Ready now?"

Before the church service began, I posted a notice on the bulletin board. I had finally come to my senses and realized the il logic in keeping valuable artifacts out on a farm where no one could see them. I would give much of it away, if only I could find someone who could appreciate the pieces, restore them to their former utilitarian beauty, and add them to a collection. I would keep only a few precious pieces for myself: the b.u.t.tonhooks and my fork from the dugout.

In church, Reverend Case spoke of current topics and events instead of the usual rehas.h.i.+ng of moral lessons. He discussed leaders.h.i.+p and the ability to inspire, comparing General Dwight D. Eisenhower's leaders.h.i.+p power to the spiritual power of Jesus Christ. Then he spoke of grat.i.tude, the good fortune we had experienced living in a safe and prosperous country during such times. I had to agree, and occasionally, even I felt lucky. Ray could have been anyone, a cruel man or one who judged me. Instead, he had turned out to be a decent and kind person, one I couldn't imagine being mean ever at all.

We stayed on for the potluck lunch. I had prepared ambrosia salad, one dish so easy even I couldn't ruin it. Throughout lunch and fellows.h.i.+p time, several older women and a few of the men came up to ask me about the artifacts. Exactly what did I have, could I date the pieces, how was their condition? I invited all of them out to the farm for a look. Giving away the collection would have an added benefit I only just then realized. I could count on some visitors for a change.

After the last inquisitor left me alone to eat my lunch, Martha came to sit beside me. She ate off a plate held high in the air and balanced perfectly with one hand. With her other hand she pulled out a yellowed and curling photograph from her handbag and pa.s.sed it over to me. "This was our grandfather, Horace Singleton, and his wife, Irma. The baby in Irma's arms was our father."

I looked at the gaunt faces. It struck me as odd that people in old photographs never smiled. Standing gravely and dressed in suit and full-length dress, the baby in Irma's arms completely covered, they looked tired, as if even the small effort required by posing for a picture had been a ch.o.r.e. "Irma wasn't our grandmother. Our grandmother died after giving birth to our father, and Irma is the woman Horace remarried."

I tried to imagine bringing a baby into this world without medical help, without adequate shelter. Had the baby been born in the dugout?

Martha resumed eating while I studied the photo. "What year was this taken?"

"Turn it over and read the back," Martha said in between bites. "Someone, I think it was my grandfather, labeled it. What does it say?"

I turned the photo over: "Old homestead, 1879."

Martha scanned the crowd. A moment later, she s.h.i.+fted in her seat. Then she arose, and after setting her plate down in the chair, she said, "I'll be right back. There's someone I'd like to introduce to you."

She returned with a white-haired older gentleman on her arm. "This is the finest doctor in all of two counties. Dr. McCutcheon, this is my sister-in-law, Olivia."

"Livvy, please," I told him.

"So I see you might be in need of a checkup," the doctor said with a smile well engraved into his cheeks.

Martha swooped up her plate and gave the old doctor her seat. "Dr. McCutcheon delivered all four of mine. He traveled out from La Junta for the two girls, but by the time I had the boys, I knew the signs. For those two, I traveled to him and enjoyed the luxury of a hospital bed."

I handed over the photograph. And this was a bit of a conspiracy. If the doctor's office was located in La Junta, why was he attending church services way out here? Obviously he had come on invitation. For a moment, I felt myself an infant with too many parents hovering about the ba.s.sinet. But then I relaxed and told myself that surely they only meant well, that it was true-I did need to see a doctor.

"No," Martha said, refusing the photograph from me. "Seeing as you enjoy history so much, I thought you might like to have it for yourself."

"I'll frame it and keep it on my dresser. Thank you," I said before she left me alone with the doctor. Their plan worked well. Before Dr. McCutcheon rose to go off and fix another plate from the selections at the buffet table, I had scheduled an appointment.

Mrs. Pratt soon came to take his place in the seat beside me. Again, she had used her kitchen skills for Ray's benefit. Beet farmers didn't have to ration sugar; therefore she had plenty of it with which to spoil Ray. In the icebox, she had left us a mixed-fruit pie with cream topping. "You'll need to leave it in there until just before you leave church today. Then place it back in your icebox as soon as you've arrived home."

After I thanked her, we sat in silence. Just when I was starting to eat and enjoy the hum of others' conversations all around me, Mrs. Pratt asked, "And when is the happy arrival to occur?"

I stopped chewing. "We're not certain."

Of course, it wasn't true. The doctor in Denver had predicted an early March delivery, only five months away and falling short of seven months after my marriage to Ray. I wondered how long it would take Mrs. Pratt and probably many others to start counting backward. How long would it take the party lines to spread the shocking news?

She picked at her food. "So fortunate to be blessed so soon."

I sat tall and sucked in.

She looked down at my lap. "Do twins run in your family?"

And this question, I couldn't answer.

Fourteen.

Around the first of October, the weather turned cooler as a front came in, bringing rain. Then, after a few days of cloudiness, Indian summer returned. I took advantage of the remaining warm days to go walking through the elm grove. Martha once explained to me how the elm trees had come to be planted. "A homesteader could add to his original claim by planting ten acres of trees. Forestation was supposed to increase rain and snowfall here, but of course it didn't work. My grandparents tried some trees, but at first they planted the wrong types, and before irrigation, it was a dismal failure. All of those trees died in less than a year. Then they found out that Chinese elms could survive just about anything."

She also told me that the first tree farm, as she called it, was now the elm grove at the Rocky Ford fairgrounds, the same place where over two hundred German POWs from Camp Trinidad were being housed.

I stepped over twigs and dead branches that had fallen from the trees. With the onions and beans pulled, while we still had warm afternoons for growth, Ray was seeding the winter wheat. And in a few days, the sugar beet harvest would begin, keeping Rose and Lorelei busy for long days at a time. But what would I do?

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The Magic Of Ordinary Days Part 7 summary

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